The House passed the bill Thursday by a vote of 286-138. Every House Democrat voted in favor of the bill, while all of the 138 votes against it were cast by Republicans, though 87 GOP Representatives did vote "yea." The Senate passed the bill on Feb. 12 by a vote of 78-22, with all 22 "nay" votes coming from Republican senators.

The congressional roll call for the vote on the bill to reauthorize this historic piece of legislation will be studied by a range of organizations and individuals in the coming days, as women's advocacy groups, feminists and folks who disagree with the bill alike seek to figure out which members of Congress went on the record on both sides of the important issues at heart of the bill.

The House of Representatives' Office of the Clerk told the International Business Times via phone at 2:15 p.m. Thursday that the official House roll call of the vote had not yet been compiled for release to media, but a number of sources have compiled lists of who voted against the bill. This story will be updated when the official roll call is made public.

The version of the bill that passed both houses of Congress was the original Senate version of the bill, which established more far-reaching protections for domestic violence victims than a House version introduced Friday. Efforts to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act had been stalled in the Republican-led House for more than a year before Thursday.

The House version of the bill, which, to reiterate, is not the one headed to Obama's desk, was criticized by many Democrats and various advocacy groups because it would have narrowed its protections for LGBT victims of domestic abuse by removing “sexual orientation" and "gender identity" from a list of "underserved populations" that face barriers to receiving victim services, according to the New York Times.

Scroll to the end of this article to read a full summary of the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013, which is the official name of the bill that passed both houses of Congress. Click here for the full text of the bill.

Below is a list of the last names of the 138 Republican members of the House who voted against the Senate version of the extension of the Violence Against Women Act that was passed by the House of Representatives on Thursday (known as H.R. 11), as compiled by the Atlantic Wire:

Requires the Office on Violence Against Women of the Department of Justice (DOJ) to establish a biennial conferral process with state and tribal coalitions, technical assistance providers, and other key stakeholders on the administration of grants and related matters.

Requires the Attorney General to authorize in writing expenditures for DOJ conferences that exceed $20,000."